Castle of no Escape es gratis para jugar — descarga y juega gratis, con ediciones de pago opcionales y DLC comparados en esta página. Desarrollado por Xitilon. Publicado por Xitilon. Lanzado el 22/6/2017. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: Action, Indie, RPG, Free To Play.

A free, turn-based rogue-lite that traces its DNA back to a 1986 text adventure and never pretends otherwise. Worth a session if you have a soft spot for handcrafted oddities nobody else is talking about.

I keep a small folder of Steam curiosities that almost nobody covers, and Castle of no Escape sits near the top of it. Xitilon built this thing out of a Ludum Dare game jam entry, rooting it explicitly in Leygref's Castle, a 1986 text adventure by Frank Dutton. That lineage matters. This is not a roguelite wearing retro clothes as a costume; it is a genuine attempt to bring an extinct design philosophy back to life inside a pixel grid, and that specificity of intention is exactly the kind of thing I find worth examining. The game takes place on a top-down 6x6 grid of question-mark-covered rooms. You pick a character whose three stats, Strength, Intelligence, and Dexterity, act as hard ceilings on what that hero can ever become. Strength doubles as your hit points and attack power. Intelligence governs both your mana pool and spell damage. Dexterity shapes your accuracy on both sides of combat. Every room you step into flips a hidden tile: monsters to fight or flee from, chests, books that may curse you, shopkeepers, orbs, and pools. The curse system has real texture: Blindness strips your map awareness and makes flares useless, Forgetfulness erases your footstep history, Lethargy hands the first attack to every enemy, and the Sign artefact counters most of them. Your two offensive spells, Web (costs 1 Intelligence, stalls an enemy for up to three turns) and Fireball (costs 2 Intelligence, obvious), give the Intelligence-heavy builds a different rhythm entirely. Collecting artefacts like the Opal, Pearl, Ruby, Diamond, and Emerald is the game's central protective loop, each one warding off a specific curse, so resource priority matters even when the RNG is throwing chaos at you. Here is where I have to be honest with the people who prefer a tidy experience: the game does not explain itself. Stats use inconsistent labels between the player and enemy displays. The flare mechanic behaves in ways that feel arbitrary until you learn the rule about Blindness. Early runs, especially with a Strength-light character, can collapse in three moves against an enemy with a number that seems unreasonable at that stage. Community players have called this unbalanced, and they are not entirely wrong. Whether that reads as hostile or as old-school texture genuinely depends on how much patience you have for design that expects you to figure it out through repeated failure rather than tooltips. The Steam user reception sits around 67 percent positive from around 160 reviews, which feels accurate. Appreciators and bouncers exist in roughly equal share. What genuinely works is the atmosphere the small team produced. Esdeer handled the graphics, music, and sound design, and the chip-tune soundtrack carries a specific kind of haunted-castle dread that the pixel art reinforces without overselling it. The 4:3 viewport is period-accurate and will feel either charming or limiting depending on your monitor situation. On the mechanical side, the three selectable hero archetypes each push a different stat priority, meaning repeat runs do change shape even if the castle stays compact. The whole thing can be completed in a single short session if you know what you are doing, which makes the permadeath sting feel proportionate rather than punishing. For players who love the quiet corners of Steam, who remember Desktop Dungeons fondly or who have ever downloaded a shareware dungeon crawler from a floppy archive, Castle of no Escape rewards the time you give it with something a modern roguelite rarely offers: a sense that every design decision was made by hand, on purpose, with a specific 1986 reference point in mind. That is rare and, to me, worth something. Kai, Scout Team

Castle of no Escape
ActionIndieRPGFree To Play

Castle of no Escape

Gratis para jugar
22 jun 2017Xitilon
GamerScout opina

A free, turn-based rogue-lite that traces its DNA back to a 1986 text adventure and never pretends otherwise. Worth a session if you have a soft spot for handcrafted oddities nobody else is talking about.

PCXbox
ProtonDB Gold
Gratis para jugar

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Acerca de Castle of no Escape

I keep a small folder of Steam curiosities that almost nobody covers, and Castle of no Escape sits near the top of it. Xitilon built this thing out of a Ludum Dare game jam entry, rooting it explicitly in Leygref's Castle, a 1986 text adventure by Frank Dutton. That lineage matters. This is not a roguelite wearing retro clothes as a costume; it is a genuine attempt to bring an extinct design philosophy back to life inside a pixel grid, and that specificity of intention is exactly the kind of thing I find worth examining. The game takes place on a top-down 6x6 grid of question-mark-covered rooms. You pick a character whose three stats, Strength, Intelligence, and Dexterity, act as hard ceilings on what that hero can ever become. Strength doubles as your hit points and attack power. Intelligence governs both your mana pool and spell damage. Dexterity shapes your accuracy on both sides of combat. Every room you step into flips a hidden tile: monsters to fight or flee from, chests, books that may curse you, shopkeepers, orbs, and pools. The curse system has real texture: Blindness strips your map awareness and makes flares useless, Forgetfulness erases your footstep history, Lethargy hands the first attack to every enemy, and the Sign artefact counters most of them. Your two offensive spells, Web (costs 1 Intelligence, stalls an enemy for up to three turns) and Fireball (costs 2 Intelligence, obvious), give the Intelligence-heavy builds a different rhythm entirely. Collecting artefacts like the Opal, Pearl, Ruby, Diamond, and Emerald is the game's central protective loop, each one warding off a specific curse, so resource priority matters even when the RNG is throwing chaos at you. Here is where I have to be honest with the people who prefer a tidy experience: the game does not explain itself. Stats use inconsistent labels between the player and enemy displays. The flare mechanic behaves in ways that feel arbitrary until you learn the rule about Blindness. Early runs, especially with a Strength-light character, can collapse in three moves against an enemy with a number that seems unreasonable at that stage. Community players have called this unbalanced, and they are not entirely wrong. Whether that reads as hostile or as old-school texture genuinely depends on how much patience you have for design that expects you to figure it out through repeated failure rather than tooltips. The Steam user reception sits around 67 percent positive from around 160 reviews, which feels accurate. Appreciators and bouncers exist in roughly equal share. What genuinely works is the atmosphere the small team produced. Esdeer handled the graphics, music, and sound design, and the chip-tune soundtrack carries a specific kind of haunted-castle dread that the pixel art reinforces without overselling it. The 4:3 viewport is period-accurate and will feel either charming or limiting depending on your monitor situation. On the mechanical side, the three selectable hero archetypes each push a different stat priority, meaning repeat runs do change shape even if the castle stays compact. The whole thing can be completed in a single short session if you know what you are doing, which makes the permadeath sting feel proportionate rather than punishing. For players who love the quiet corners of Steam, who remember Desktop Dungeons fondly or who have ever downloaded a shareware dungeon crawler from a floppy archive, Castle of no Escape rewards the time you give it with something a modern roguelite rarely offers: a sense that every design decision was made by hand, on purpose, with a specific 1986 reference point in mind. That is rare and, to me, worth something.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayertrading-cardstier:sub-5Turn-Based CombatCurse SystemStat-Gate ProgressionJam OriginRetro Dungeon CrawlerArtifact CollectionOld-School DifficultyChiptune SoundtrackGrid-Based Movement

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows XP
Memory
1 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
10 MB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9.0c compatible
Processor
RP2A07 @ 1.662607 MHz (~601 ns per cycle)
Sound Card
2 pulse wave generators, a triangle wave, noise.

Recomendados

OS
Windows 7
Memory
2 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
10 MB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9.0c compatible
Processor
RP2A03 @ 1.773448 MHz (~564 ns per cycle)
Sound Card
+Delta Pulse Code Modulation channel for playing sound samples.

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Xitilon
Distribuidora
Xitilon
Fecha de lanzamiento
22 jun 2017

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¿Cuánto cuesta Castle of no Escape?

Castle of no Escape es gratis para jugar — descargarlo y jugarlo no cuesta nada en PC, Xbox. Cualquier edición, DLC o complemento dentro del juego opcional aparece en la tabla de precios de esta página.

¿Castle of no Escape tiene compras dentro del juego?

Castle of no Escape es gratis para descargar y jugar, y se monetiza mediante compras opcionales dentro del juego como cosméticos, ediciones o DLC en lugar de un precio inicial. Cualquier edición o complemento de pago disponible aparece en la tabla de precios de esta página.

¿En qué plataformas está disponible Castle of no Escape?

Castle of no Escape está disponible en PC, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Castle of no Escape?

Castle of no Escape se lanzó el 22 de junio de 2017.

¿Quién desarrolló Castle of no Escape?

Castle of no Escape fue desarrollado por Xitilon.